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Basic Concepts of Enzyme Action Stryer Short Course Chapter 6.

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Presentation on theme: "Basic Concepts of Enzyme Action Stryer Short Course Chapter 6."— Presentation transcript:

1 Basic Concepts of Enzyme Action Stryer Short Course Chapter 6

2 Enzymes Biocatalysts Active site Substrate and product Catalyzed rate Uncatalyzed rate

3 Rate Enhancement Which is a better catalyst, carbonic anhydride Or OMP decarboxylase? Defend your answer.

4 Orotidine Decarboxylase Key enzyme in production of nucleotides for DNA T 1/2 = 14 ms But what makes it a great enzyme?

5 The Speed of the Uncatalyzed Rxn

6 Substrate Specificity Example: Proteolytic enzymes Trypsin vs. Thrombin

7 Substrate Specificity Specificity pocket Binding affinity Promiscuity

8 Question What effects would the following mutations have on enzyme specificity? – Trypsin D189E – Elastin V226A, T216A – Trypsin D189K

9 EC Nomenclature

10 Enzyme Classes 1.Oxidoreductase Recognize Redox reactions Redox cofactors: NAD + /NADH, FAD/FADH 2, Q/QH 2 Dehydrogenases, oxidases, peroxidases, reductase

11 Enzyme Classes 2. Transferase 2 substrates Coenzymes often involved Transferase, kinase

12 Enzyme Classes 3.Hydrolase Water nucleophile Phosphatase, nuclease, protease, peptidase

13 Enzyme Classes 4. Lyase Hardest to recognize—not redox, hydrolysis Elimination of a group to give double bond Reversible Hydratase, decarboxylase, (formerly synthases)

14 Enzyme Classes 5. Isomerase Rearragement without loss/add Racemase, isomerase, mutase (phosphate)

15 Enzyme Classes 6. Ligase Joining together with ATP input Irreversible Synthetase, carboxylase

16 Problem To which class do the enzymes that catalyze the following reactions belong?

17 Problem Propose a name for each enzyme.

18 Cofactors Apoenzyme vs holoenzyme Cofactors – Coenzymes Prosthetic groups Cosubstrates – Metals Function to enable specific chemistry

19 Thermodynamics vs Kinetics Gibbs Free Energy – Spontaneous – Favorable – exergonic  G = G pdt – G rxt – Path independent – Doesn’t tell us about kinetics

20 Equilibrium Is this reaction at equilibrium or not? If not, in which direction does the equilibrium lie? You can’t understand thermodynamics until we clear up some common misconceptions about equilibrium…

21 Standard Free Energy Every reaction moves spontaneously toward equilibrium—but that could be either direction There is a relationship between equilibrium constant and free energy of the reaction If we start with 1M reactants and products, the free energy change of that reaction is called the “standard” free energy  G o ’ is a reflection of the chemical potential (stability of bonds) – Negative  G o ’ means equilibrium favors pdts – Larger  G o ’ means it is favored to a greater degree  G 0’ = -RT ln K eq The 0 means “standard” – 1 M, 1 atm, 298 K The ‘ means “biological standard” – pH 7, 55M water

22 Standard Free Energy What do these examples mean? – Under standard conditions, glutamine will spontaneously turn into glutamate. – Hydrolysis of ATP is more favorable than hydrolysis of glucose-6-phosphate

23 Standard Free Energy vs. Free Energy  G o’ = -32 kJ and  G = -32 kJ  G o’ is -32 kJ  G = zero AD ATP ADP + P i ATP ADP P i

24 Quantitative Problems What is [product]/[rxt] ratio of ATP hydrolysis to ADP at equilibrium? –  G 0’ = -RT ln K eq – R = 8.314 J/mol K, T in Kelvin – [ADP][Pi]/[ATP] = 4.1 x 10 5 = K eq What is the free energy of ATP hydrolysis when it reaches equilibrium? – Equilibrium = DEAD!

25 A Second Misconception… I have mixed together some glutamate, ammonia, glutamine, and water. Will my reaction proceed spontaneously to the left or to the right?

26 A Second Misconception… We don’t know—it depends on HOW MUCH of each you have mixed together. Reactions always move spontaneously toward equilibrium, but we need to know ACTUAL CONCENTRATIONS to determine which direction that is

27 Example Standard Free energy allows us to calculate equilibrium concentrations K eq = 0.00352, so for example – [glutamine] = 1 mM – [NH 4 + ] = 0.53M – [glutamate] = 0.53M Fill in the table [glutamine][NH 4 + ][glutamate]Right or left? 1 M 0.1 mM0.53M 1 mM0.53M0.23M

28 Free Energy The free energy of a PARTICULAR reaction depends on two factors – The nature of the bonds in the reaction – The concentration of the compounds A reaction with a –  G o ’ can be spontaneous or nonspontaneous under cellular conditions.

29 Free Energy of ATP hydrolysis Actual cellular concentrations don’t vary much from [P i ]=[ATP] = 5 mmol and [ADP]= 1 mmol Problem: What is the actual free energy of ATP hydrolysis in the cell? More or less than -32 kJ? What does this mean, physiologically?

30 Standard Free Energy vs. Free Energy In this example,  G o’ is negative, so  G is negative because  G =  G o’. Once it reaches equilibrium,  G o’ is still the same value, but  G has reached zero.  =  G 0’ + RT ln K eq  G 0’ = -RT ln K eq

31 Energy Diagrams Energy Diagrams are a measure of the start of a reaction (often standard conditions) The free energy changes as the reaction progresses because the concentrations change

32 Rule of Thumb

33 Kinetics

34 How Enzymes Change Kinetics Two major effects on mechanisms—any or all may be used in a given enzyme – Chemical Mechanisms (later chapters) Acid-base catalysis Covalent catalysis Metal ion catalysis – Binding Mechanisms (this chapter) Proximity/orientation effect Transition State Stabilization

35 Binding Energy Binding based on intermolecular forces “Lock and Key” Rate Enhancement – Orientation – Effective concentration

36 Orientation Productive orientation of two molecules in the active site “Entropy trap”

37 Induced Fit “Lock and Key” too simplistic Enzymes are actually somewhat flexible Substrate specificity comes at catalytic price Lower rate, but worth cost

38 Induced Fit Example: hexokinase Two loops apart until glucose binds Then ATP  ADP If site were closed, then water could enter and ATP  ADP without glucose Net hydrolysis of ATP with no purpose

39 Lowering Activation Energy Enzyme binds TS tighter than starting material

40 Transition State Analogs Can serve as inhibitors Example: Proline racemase – Which class? Error in figure – TS vs high energy intermediate

41 Weak Binding of Substrate TS binding stabilitzation is only half of the story Substrate binding: can have too much of a good thing Thermodynamic pit Substrate half bound ~ 10 -4 M


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